At one point in its development, Skyrim was gonna be a lot more⦠macabre.
Digging through game files, Skyrim fans uncovered two scrapped features that wouldāve made NPC death a bit more meaningful. Once upon a time, the fantasy role-playing mega-behemoth was set to include haunting and mourning. Hereās how they work:
Haunting: when a unique NPC with family dies, there will be a random chance that it willāafter some timeāāresurrectā as a ghost that will follow a relative for the rest of the game. Only NPC with generic voice files (donāt expect to see Ulfric as a ghost), and only a single NPC in the whole save. You wonāt be able to fill Skyrim with ghosts (it was left like that by Bethesda).
Mourning: when a unique NPC with family or friends dies, their relatives/friends will do some comment about their loss to you on their hello dialogues.
Somewhat fittingly, vagonumero12 resurrected the two features as a mod, which you can download over at Nexus. Itās a super small download sinceāas vagonumero12 points outāmost of the files are already in Skyrimās code.
Now, as interesting as both features sound, itās important to note that they were never properly finished. So, for instance, mourning dialogue is pretty limited across the board. Weirdly, however, the dialogue was recorded by all generic NPC voice actors, so you can theoretically get things likechildren mourning their husbands and daughters. Uhhhhhhh.
Still, itās pretty cool that a) this stuff exists and b) fans found and restored it years after the game came out. Iād love to see both ideas expanded on in other open world games. I feel like it might make me think twice about chopping up random NPCs like dead-eyed salami or using them for my Fus Ro Dah golf games. I mean, Iād either get sadāassuming mourning was expanded to be a more pervasive, life-changing thingāor develop a crippling fear of ghosts (aka, the main reasons I donāt kill people in real life). Maybe itās just me, but if Iām gonna play a blood-soaked mass murderer, itād at least be cool if some games handed me a mirror every once in a while.
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